Victory of the Battle Maiden

The Battle Maiden and her lackey welcome you

Victory of the Battle Maiden

Thanks for taking the time to type in what’s maybe the longest website name in the world. Everyone has a story
about their walk with God. This is ours. We hope you get immense pleasure and amusement out of this traumatic,
gut-wrenching experience that threatened to rip us apart. Enjoy! Mostly, though, it is our prayer that no matter
what your faith and no matter where you are on your journey, this book will bring you just that much closer to
God.

About Blind Monk Books

Victory of the Battle Maiden is self-published. That means at some point in the process of filling out all the
official forms that are required to publish a book, I was faced with a blank line that said “Publisher.”

So I thought of names like Victory Press (yawn), Full Court Press (too irrelevant) and about 50 other names.
None of them excited me. More

Victory of the Battle Maiden is self-published. That means at some point in the process of filling out all the
official forms that are required to publish a book, I was faced with a blank line that said “Publisher.”

So I thought of names like Victory Press (yawn), Full Court Press (too irrelevant) and about 50 other names.
None of them excited me. Then I started daydreaming about the history of publishing, and thinking about
Gutenberg (Johannes, not Steve) and his use of movable type around 1440. Then I thought how instrumental
Gutenberg’s printing press had been in disseminating the Bible so that people could own their own personal
copies, instead of having to visit a Catholic Church to read the one that was chained there (much like pens are
chained at the bank).

Then I thought of the manner in which the Bible had been produced up until that point in time, and found myself
imagining all those countless, anonymous monks who had spent their lives copying the Bible for the first 1400 or
so years of the Church’s existence. As I imagined them hunched over draftsman’s tables late at night, carefully
dipping quill in ink, squinting at dim pages lit by a single flickering candle, I was filled with an immense
sense of gratitude. And I thought of Blind Monk Books.

I don’t know if any monks literally went blind, and some may have, but for me, that’s beside the point. The
point is that they spent their lives copying and spreading the written Word of God, purely out of love for God
and their fellow man. So to show my appreciation and to honor them: Blind Monk Books.

To all those thousands of holy monks, whose names are lost to the centuries but not to God, on behalf of all of
us who share your love for holy written works, and most especially the Bible:
Thank you. Less

Employee of the Month

It's always a tough decision every month. Congratulations to Doug! Good luck in the Employee of the Year
competition.